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Wilders, the Dutch, and the Future of Europe

Mar 18, 2017

Times are a changing. After Brexit and Trump – two unexpected victories – other countries are now looking at radical political and social turnarounds. This is especially the case in Europe. We had one election there this week, and we have more important ones to come in the months ahead.

The people of the Netherlands went to the polls on March 15 for their general election. According to the mainstream media, the controversial Geert Wilders and his party did not do well, and things are back to business as usual. But the truth is otherwise.

What happened in fact was Wilders’ party gained seats while many mainstream parties lost seats. Mark Rutte and his People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD), as well as the Labour Party (PvdA) both lost seats. While Rutte will stay on as Prime Minister, he does not have all that much to be excited about.

By way of background, there were 28 parties running in this election, and in the Dutch lower house there are 150 seats, so 76 are needed for victory. Most leading parties only get around 25-30 seats, so to form government, you have to enter into coalition with other parties.

And many of the other main parties said they would not go into coalition with the Wilders’ Freedom Party (PVV). So we ended up with the VVD losing 8 seats, and the PvdA losing 29 seats, while the PVV picked up 5 seats. So now the party of Wilders has the second greatest number of seats in the Dutch parliament. That is not a bad outcome all things considered.

Geert Wilders has fundamentally changed the conversation about Islam and immigration. And the political parties of the Netherlands are increasingly reacting to him. Wilders took an election in a country whose political shifts are generally of little interest to those living outside it and made it a matter of international interest. His courage and common sense have made him into a world leader.
Wilders had the courage to defy the assassins and murderers, the politically correct scolds and the bleeding hearts, the pallid men and women who counsel moderation in all things and at all times, to tell the truth about Islam and Islamic migration. That is what he will go on doing even as he lives under threat. And his courage inspires opponents of the Jihad in the Netherlands and around the world.www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/266125/geert-wilders-and-real-story-election-daniel-greenfield

Shifting Sands in Europe

But Holland is not the only country that is having a rethink. Many European nations have seen firsthand what open slather immigration policies and Islamic terrorism can do, and they are not liking it. The French for example will be going to the polls in two rounds for their presidential election (April 23 and May 7). French National Front leader Marine Le Pen is expected to do very well. She is also greatly concerned about Islamic immigration, and she also wants to see her nation pull out of the EU.

And then of course we have the federal elections to be held in Germany on September 24. Disquiet with Merkel and her botched immigration and multiculturalism policies is on the rise. Consider the growing support for the anti-migrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. In 2013 they had 5 per cent support, but now they are up to 16 per cent.

Such attacks in both France and Germany are certainly fuelling the anti-establishment movement. Washington-based commentator Darrell Delamaide speaks about the Dutch election, and how things are panning out in France and Germany:

It could well be that Le Pen will get a bigger share of the disillusioned leftist vote as she defends many of the worker protections the center-left has fought for. Unlike in the Netherlands, France’s first-past-the post voting system presents voters with limited choices.
In addition, the National Front appears to be drawing a disproportionate share of the youth vote, which is uncharacteristic for a far-right party. With youth unemployment near 25% in France — and many of those with jobs only on temporary contract — the promise of an economic renewal for the country outside the EU has considerable appeal for this voting segment.
It may be an empty promise, but voters know for a fact that the current EU policies dictated by Germany are not working for France.
As for Germany, the Social Democratic Party was becoming marginalized after being co-opted into Chancellor Angela Merkel’s grand coalition, circling the drain much like the Dutch Labor Party and the French Socialist Party.
But after the party leadership compromised by its part in the Merkel government stepped aside in favor of Martin Schultz, who has spent his political career in the European Parliament, the Social Democrats have rediscovered their leftist roots and rebounded in the polls.
That resurgence is being complemented by the rise of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) on the far right, which is draining away votes from Merkel’s Christian Democrats. Together, these factors are posing a real challenge to her election to a fourth term as chancellor.
The common thread in France and Germany is voter disaffection with the ruling political elite. Neither of the leading candidates in France — Le Pen and renegade Socialist Emmanuel Macron, who founded his own party — is from a mainstream party. One of them is almost sure to be president.
In Germany, a relatively high hurdle for parliamentary representation has made the political environment historically more stable. But the virtual certainty that the AfD will cross that threshold and make it into the national Parliament has the potential to create turmoil.
In short, it would be a mistake to read Wilders’s shortfall in the Netherlands as a decisive signal in favor the status quo in these much more important EU nations.www.marketwatch.com/story/europes-elites-shouldnt-get-wrong-idea-from-dutch-election-2017-03-16

Finally, mention could be made of the upcoming Danish elections, to be held on November 21. Consider yet another populist politician who is causing waves there:

The 41-year-old leader of Nye Borgerlige or ‘The New Right’ party polled at 4.8 per cent in late February, an incredible feat as the party was only founded less than two years ago. Her ideas are gaining so much popularity that it would be dangerous to ignore her, says Andreas Reventlow in an opinion piece for The EU Observer.
Mr Reventlow, a political commentator and an adviser at the Copenhagen based non-profit International Media Support, says the rise of the blonde politician comes amid the popularity of France’s Marine Le Pen and the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders.
Ms Vermund’s hardline policies include banning headscarves in schools, stricter controls on migrants and leaving the European Union. She also wants to limit Danish citizenship to people who “contribute positively” to society and have a job and only give asylum to refugees from the UN’s refugee agency’s resettlement scheme. www.express.co.uk/news/world/778656/Denmark-s-far-right-leader-Pernille-Vermund-polls-well-anti-Muslim-Marine-Le-Penv

So these are just some of the places to keep an eye on in changing Europe. There seems to be a general move under foot to reject politics as usual, to reject establishment politics and politicians, and to put the wellbeing of European nations ahead of failed policies of multiculturalism, immigration, and globalism.

Interesting times indeed.

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4 Responses to Wilders, the Dutch, and the Future of Europe

I don’t ever recall a time when the British were so interested in overseas elections! But these times are quite different, as we know. It was disconcerting, however, to see some pro-migration groups gaining seats in the Dutch Parliament….their proposed activities should cause alarm.
Who was it that said God plays a mean game of chess?

Why am I not surprised? The EU has had its day, and much of Europe is now voting for proactive change. Angela Merkel, for one, is well past her use-by date. Her policies have proved disastrous, and nobody in their right mind wants to see a repeat performance. Now all that Europe needs is a spiritual revival!

Hi Bill, I was watching BBC very early this morning. There has been another shooting at one of Paris’s Airports, and now, British & allied troops are moving into Estonia for “training exercises”. Wilders and Le Pen along with other such like groups throughout Europe have touched on, and fed on the one thing that has slowly built up, and that is now gripping Europe. I call it FEAR!! There hasn’t been this sort of growing unease and uncertainty in Europe since the 1930’s. The issues with Islamic refugees and Russian sabre rattling along inequalities within the EU structure have contributed to it, and the results of Brexit and Trump amongst others, are symptoms of it. In early 1939, the world watched the lights starting to go out all over Europe. History has this terrible habit of repeating itself, what we are now seeing in Europe is only the tip of the iceberg, it will get worse! Jesus told the parable of the house built on sand, and the house built on solid rock, I along with many others feel safe in this house that was built on solid rock. Many thanks again Bill for all the effort you’ve put into researching and compiling for this article, regards, Kel.

Thanks for the great update Bill.
There is a remnant in Europe, and it doesn’t take all that much.
“A little yeast works through the whole batch of dough” Jesus of Nazareth 31AD.
So, things are bad, much worse than most people realize, but as we resist evil we can have a noticeable effect.

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